HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1970-08-13, Page 24WENTEa DUO
Singer Anne Murray and singer-composer Gene McLellan,
regulars on CBC-TV's SINGALONG JUBILEE, are also heard
regularly on CBC Radio. Anne will be seen this fall in a
CBC-TV special with Gene as her special guest,
Letter to the Editor
TODAY'S CHILD
BY HELEN ALLEN
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TcabataTelegram Syndicate
That happy smile belongs to Roy, an appealing three-
year-old of Anglo'-Saxon and West African descent. Roy is a
handsome boy with expressive brown eyes, black curly hair
and bronze skin. -
Sturdy and healthy, Roy has a Veasant personality — so
pleasant that he is spoiled in his foster home, He has been
slow in talking d'nd has a manor speech impediment. Doctors
say he, has not needed to talk because everytme seems to
jump to give him things, They feel he will get over the
speech difficulty and do not recommend therapy,
Roy is not a demanding child. Re seems quite able to
entertain himself with his toys and is especially good at
creating things with building blocks.
This little boy needs a loving family who will not worry
over his speech problem and will value his heritage.
To inquire about adopting Roy, please, write to Today's
Child, Department of Social and Family Services, Parlia.
ment Buildings, Toronto 182. Vox general adoption informa.
tioti ask your Children's AM society,
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GEBEL CABINETS LIMITED
No. 4 Highway — 5 miles south of Exeter
Manufacturers of
ALL TYPES OF
CABINETS
Custom — Built To Your Specifications
mum Iui~
faimmir
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.KITCHEN CABINETS
.BATHROOM VANITIES
.BOOK SHELVES & DIVIDERS
INQUIRIES
PHONE LUCAN 227-4431 DAYS
INVITED '
227-4592 Evenings
33 34,35, 36k,
ELLWOOD $80000.00 Stock
EPPS SALE Reduction Continues
Clinton
We have sold our slot e in Clinton, but before the new OWDO1 s 1 gii(11 OVOI tni Supi Ist , we MIS!
REDUCE OUR LARGE STOCK. All former sale prices have been reduced again — every single item in
the store is ON SALE. Save now on all types of sports goods — guns '- fishing tackle, camping and
cottage supplies, marine equipment -- army surplus goods, ammunition — antiques — just about
everything for the camper — hunter — sportsman — fisherman.
SEE THESE & HUNDREDS MORE — 'ONCE IN A LIFETIME BARGAINS.
FINAL SALE STARTS THURS. AUG. 23RD & WILL END ON AUG. 29TH.
Subject to prior sale. Terms: cash, All sales final,
FISHING LURES (there are thousands),
very best brands. FINAL SALE — Buy
one and get another for lc.
"MEDICINE BALLS"Tfor exercising), all
leather — would make ideal hassocks or
footstools, New — $24.00 FINAL
SALE $2.00 EA.
,"HUNTING KNIVES" — we've got
hundreds — all styles — all sizes! FINAL
SALE DISCOUNTS — 25 to 50% — some
even more!
GUNS — all types — one of the largest
selections in Canada — Winchester —
Remington Savage, plus some of the
finest imports: AMOS — shotguns —
handguns — FINAL SALE PRICES.
"MILITARY SURPLUS" — useful items
at crazy prices! Water canteens — 88e ea.
Tool pouches -- ideal for snow Machine
tractor — car of boat — 18e ea.
"SUPERIOR UNIVERSAL" rifle scopes
—.1/2 PRICE!
22 CAL. "'COOEY" military rifle'
excellent shape worth $25.00 to $35.00
)FINAL SALE $9.95 EA.!
A GREAT DEAL OF NEW FALL
MERCHANDISE HAS ARRIVED
RECENTLY WS ALL OFFERED AT
SALE DISCOUNTS,,
Compact folding canoe or kayak fits in
car trunk! Was $329.00
FINAL SALE $100.00.
18 H.P. EVINRUDE (hew). $610.00 reg.
SALE $448.00, Used motors — bargain
priced!
Beautiful all leather GUN CASES — reg.
$22,50F1NAL SALE $10.50 EA,!
"TRIUS" TRAPS — reg. $40.00. FINAL
SALE $29.99. CLAY BIRDS — sale —
$3.88
Brand name fishing rods — $12.00 to
$14.00. SALE — $6.69 to $7,47 ea. All
reels — lines•etc. — REDUCED.
USED HOCKEY EQUIPMENT, best
quality oh sale how at about lb% of
the original value!
6" DECORATED ALUM. TRAYS OR
COASTERS — outdoor scenes were
70c eaSALE 3 for $1.00 10 for $2.001
ELLWOOD'S PRIVATE COLLECTION
— antique guns — pistols "Winchester"
and others. ALL SALE PRICED. Other
antiques — ON SALE.
"C.C.M." HOCKEY SKATES — men's —
boys'. Reg. $29.00...SALE $16.88 PR.!
GAME & BIRD CALLS — reduced 25%
or more. Visit the SPECIAL SALE
WAREHOUSE — hundreds of bargains4
Buy now for the season — all ammunition
on salerFREE — with every box — one
twist wire gun cleaner. •
Deluxe Johnson fishing outfit — spin reel
— glass rod — tine -7. a $22.95 value
FINAL SALE $14.88.
Best quality reloading equipment and
bullets — going now at wholesale prices
AND LESS!
`11UCKHEIMER" HOLSTERS — Values
$16,00 to $14,60 SALE $4.47 EA,.
NOTE: ME NEW OWNERS WILL CONTINUE TO OPERATE THIS BUSINESS
UNDER THE NAME "ELLWOOD EPPS SPORTING GOODS." STORE REOPENS
,SEPT. 4TH.
BRING THE FAMII Y FNJOY THESE FINAL SALE BARGAINS UNTIL THE 79th
ELLWOOD EPPS SPORTING GOODS-CLINTON
6A Minton Nevus-HgQQN14 Thursday, .Atigog. 20, 1970
OPP Reportsr
I had a telephone call the
other day from an old friend
who told me she loved to read in
this column about 'my family, I
don't like to belabor the point
about' my family- ft is kind of
like running hornernovies nice
but you can get TOO much.
Rut lately so much has been
happening with our family that I
feel I should really fill you in on
some of the details. Maybe some
of you share the same problems
and wonder if you are alone in
them.
Let me tell you first about
our eldest son — the drummer
boy. Yes, he's still drumming.
think he's getting better but I
seldom take the plugs out of my
ears anymore to really find out.
"The kid could have taken up
_model building," my husband
whines, every once in a while
through the drone of guitars and
things.
Our son has had a job since
early Spring, you know. He's not
entirely hippy just yet. But there
are days when I wonder whether
I wouldn't just as soon have him
at home in bed. He has used
almost every cent of his hard
earned cash to purchase frills
for his drums. Now his drums
extend across the entire width of
our family room and boast three
large, ringing, vibrating cymbals;
a high hat; five assorted drums
and some other gadgets for
which I wouldn't even know the
names.
And a week or two ago we
had a bonus. Our ton met a
fellow with a set of drums who
was willing to loan our boy the
complete outfit for a few days.
You guessed it. Double the
pleasure for sonny but twice the
headache for mom and dad.
Last week I was struck down
with the flu bug, ppointo mt yea,
righting for every last ounce of
life in me, I was serenaded
regularly by the lad's newest
perfected roll.
"Even on My death bed is
there no peace?" I wondered.
And the summer has brought
new problems. Young people,
friends of our children, come to
visit daily, I approve of this. It Is
healthy • and good, But some
days it, sets beyond hectic.
We have three doors into our
house and some days every one
is swinging almost incessantly. I
try to keep tabs on who is
coming and going but there are
times when I 'simply go upstairs,
shut the bedroom door and try
to forget it.
The other night' one of the
fellows came to our house
looking for one of his pals.
"He's not here," •I told him.
"Where is he?" he asked.
• "Have you tried his house?" I
asked.
"No. I didn't think of that. I
didn't expect him tq be at
home," he retorted simply.
That should give you some
idea of the popularity of our
house.
And the telephone. Could you
possibly believe that our
telephone is busier than any one
in Eaton's chain?
Our telephone is so busy that
my husband's business associates
have given up trying to reach
him at home. It's true. They
simply get in their cars and drive
over without even trying the
phone.
And even that will present a
problem soon. Many of our
house guests are getting their
driver's permits now and our
limited parking lot will be filled.
My husband's friends will have
SEAFORTH
Insures:.
* Town Dwellings
* All CfasS of Penn Property
* Summer cottages
* Churthes, Schools,i Halls
(Extended coverage (wind,
smoke, water damage, falling
objects etc,) it also available.
te Park (Iowa 'Elie 0100 a bit,
"At your age, the walk does
you goad," quips our son.
EverY once in a white.
grandma comes to visit. She's a
good soul and she seems to hold
up well under the ring of the
telephone, the sound of the
drums, the wail of the record
player, the banging at the doors,
the twanging of the ,guitars, the
pounding of transistor radios,
the hum of i dozen teenage
voices plus all the other normal
household sounds.
In fact, her visits to our hive
of confusion , may have been
what kept her calm recently in
the face of an emergency,
When that sniper went berserk
in London, our grandma was
caught in the crossfire, so as to
speak. She was on the .scene, It
shook her up a little but not
really so much as it might have
had she not been attuned to
bedlam at out house.
SALT REDUCLON DOES NOT
ALWAYS REDUCE FAT
No permanent weight loss will
be achieved with the kind of
self-imposed salt restricted diet
that is possible for a person to
undertake in the home (by not
saltipg in the kitchen or at the
table, or by avoiding the
naturally salty foods).
But, assuming that the
amateur does reduce his salt
intake over a long period of
time, and cuts his salt reserves to
minimum levels, then runs into
serious trouble such as a severe
injury, major surgery, a heat
spell with excessive sweating
what then? The answer is clear.
He then develops the symptoms
of salt deficiency. That is when
he pays the penalty of
self-diagnosis and treatment. The
trouble is that he may not get
over it.
In cases like these, it may be
useless to try to persuade people
so misled: that such self-imposed
low-salt are worthless; that they
can be extremely dangerous;
that anyone who would be
benefitted by withholding salt
from the diet is a sick person
and needs medical care; but
those are the facts. And here are
the reasons why.
Low sodium, salt-free,
Salt-poor, or sodium-restricted
diets — call them by any name —
are prescribed by physicians for
some — not all — patients
suffering from certain serious
heart, kidney and liver diseases.
Each of these is a certain serious,
prostrating illness which may be
fatal if not skillfully and
competently treated.
It is true, of course, that the
symptoms of salt deficiency may
appear in salt-restricted patients,
even under medical care, The
symptoms range from fatigue
prostration — the results of the
loss of extracellular fluid and
disturbances of postassium
balance, kidney function and of
nitrogen balance,
But, these are part of the risk
run by the patient to escape
another danger of health-edema.
He is safe, however; the
physician who knows him and
the danger, stands watchfully by
to guard him. The physician
takes the responsibility for the
calculated risk.
Man's historic regard for salt
is a necessity has been
abundantly confirmed by
science which values it as more
important to the body's
well-being than any other of the
chemical salts in the human
make-up.
Dear Sir:
I was shocked to read of the
political bickering that plagued
the recent meeting of the World
Youth Assembly of the United
Nations. ,
The accounts re-affirmed my
faith in the need for programs
such as the Ontario Department
of Education's. PROJECT
SCHOOL-TO-SCHOOL. As
Co-ordinator of this program
since its inception in January
1968, it has given me great
satisfaction to see it establish a
growing bond of friendship and
understanding between our
people and those of the
developing countries of the
Commonwealth Caribbean.
Through the exchange of
letters and personal mementoes
and classroom projects reflecting
their day-to-day life and their
cultural heritage, over 300,000
students from many ethnic
backgrounds, share their lives
and express very positive views
regarding their aspirations for
world peace, understanding and
mutual respect.
In a recent speech on
International Education Year,
Hon. W. S. Stevens, Minister of
Education and Health for
Dominica, W. I,, said that
Project School-to-School is
bringing about closer human
Please be careful in his.
INVESTIOAT1QN$
Criminal: Thefts, four;
Breaking and 'Entering, three;
Disturbances, five; Other, 35,
ACCIDENTS
Traffic: Aecidents, 10;
Property Damage, seven;
Personal Injury, two; Fatal, one;
No. Injured, four; No. Killed,
one,
On SundaA July 26, on No.
21 Highway north of Jet, Huron
Rd. 10 (Drysdale) Karl Jansel,
184 Central Avenue, London,
and Gerald Asa Steckle, RR 2,
Zurich, were involved in a two
car accident resulting in minor
damage to their vehicles.
On Monday, July 27, on Con.
Rd. 12 at Jet. of Sideroad 3,
Carl Reinhardt, RR 2, Teeswater
and William Hogan, RR 3,
Lucknow, were involved in a
two car accident resulting in
damage to the vehicles they were
driving.
On Tuesday, July 28; on No.
25 Cty. Rd. west of
Carlow-Intersection No. 1 Cty.
Rd., Blair Arnold Ketch, 350
King Street, West, Kitchener and
Lillian Hewerdine, 29 Front
Street, London, were involved in
a two car accident resulting in
damage to the vehicles they were
driving.
On Wednesd iay, July 29, on
No. 21 Hwy. south of Jet. Hwy.
86 (Amberley) Thomas HugheS,
Marie Lakes, Walkerton was
involved in a single car accident
resulting in damage to his
vehicle. Hughes received injuries.
On Wednesday, July 29, on
No. 31 Cty. Rd. at intersection
of No. 6 Sideroad, James
Kernighan, RR 4, Goderich and
Brian Samuel Mabon, RR 6,
Goderich were involved in a
motorcycle car accident
resulting' in damage to the
vehicles they were driving.
Kernighan was fatally injured,
On Friday, July 31, on Con.
2, Tuckersmith Twp. west of
No. 12 Cty. Rd. James Richard
Scott, 83 Chalk St., Seaforth
was involved ' in a single car
accident resulting in damage to
his vehicle.
On Friday, July 31, on No. 8
Hwy. east of Seaforth, Glen
Nelson Smith, 693 Talbot
Street, London was involved in a
single car accident resulting in
minor damage to, the vehicle he
was driving.
On Friday, July 31, on Lot
24, Maitland Cpn, east of No. 31
Cty. Rd. a parked unattended
vehicle owned by Norman
Atkinson, RR 2, Clinton was
struck by a vehicle driven by
Hilda 'Hakker, RR 2, Clinton
resulting in minor damage to the
vehicles.
On Friday, July 31, on No. 21
Highway, south of Port Albert
(River Br.) Gaston Lalonde, 1049
Elgin Street, Wal-a-cAurg, Paul
Willi Lamparsici, 83 Cambria
Street, Stretford and .Edward
Ph*, Hensall, were involved in a
three car accident resulting
damage to their vehiples,
fasSengers Elsie; and Franz
Lamparski, 83 Cambria 'Street,
Stratford and Charles
1301 Elgin .street, Wallacehurg
received injuries.
On Saturday, August 1, on No,
21 Hwy, south of Goderich,
Gerald Boersma, ,RR I, Exeter
and Robert Thompson, 1400
Rentworth Avenue, Apt. 44,
London, were -involved in 'a two
car accident resulting in damage
to the vehicles they were driving.
Charges, 44; 38;
L,C.A., six; of which two are
minors; Warnings, 24,
General, Requests for
Assistance, 28; Prisoner Escort,
two; Convictions, In Provincial
Court, Criminal Division, 63
Persons convicted of H.T.A.
offences and three convicted of
L.C.A. offences.
WARNINGI
Motorists! Before starting out
on a holiday trip, make sure you
start in a car that is in good
working order, Break-downs
away from home can be costly.
They can mean long delays , .
time and money gone . even a
life lost by a collision. Make sure
your car is in excellent operating.
condition as part of your
holiday preparations.
Autumn
starter
easy-pay
loans
Now is the time to mice
sure your home is up-to
date and ready for Winter,
We'll lend you money on
collateral or we'll arrange '
mortgage loans. Wei('
experienced service,
Competitive rates.
Personalized attention.
Arrange it today at
Victoria and Grey.
VICTORIA
GREY
TRUST COMPANY SINCE 1669
Lealand Hill, Manager
Elgin and Kingston Streets,
Godilrich .624-7381
From My -Window
Gran., nia Was in
crossfire
Shirley Keller
understanding between the two
peoples. He called on the United
Nations to adopt the program as
a means of establishing useful
friendships throughout the
entire world, regardless of color,
class or creed,
Recently, the Project
School-to-School Co-ordinators
from seventeen Commonwealth
Caribbean states, attended a
seminar, in Toronto sponsored
by the Department of education.
At that time, the Minister of
Education, William G. Davis,
summed up the expressed views
of thousands of Canadian and
West 'Indian youth when he
stated: "Without
communication there can be no
understanding; without
understanding there can be no
respect; without respect there
can be no peace."
To many this statement will
be an oversimplification of the
world's ills. But, where better to
be-gin?
Yours sincerely,
George J. Mason,
Co-Ordinator,
Special Projects Unit.
Agents;'James keys, !tit 1, Seaforth; V. Lane, itit 6, Seaforth;
Vni Leiper, Londesboro; Selwyn Baker, Artissels; 'Harold
Squire, Clinton; Ceorge Coyne, Dublin; Donald C. 'Eaton,
Seatorth,